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By Adrian Ash |
May 22, 2012
Wholesale prices to buy gold fell further from $1,600 an ounce in London on Tuesday morning, finding a floor at $1575 as European stock markets rose for the second day running after falling for two weeks in succession.
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By Mark O'Byrne |
May 15, 2012
Gold edged up in early Asian trading to $1,560/oz. prior to renewed selling that saw the price fall and gold briefly pierced below support at $1,550/oz. prior to a slight bounce higher in early European trading.
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By Philip Burgert |
May 15, 2012
A Q&A with the chairman of Sprott Inc., chief excutive officer, chief investment officer and senior portfolio manager for Sprott Assett Management LP and chairman of Sprott Money Ltd., on his “Call to Action” to silver producers.
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By Adrian Ash |
May 10, 2012
Wholesale market prices to buy gold and silver repeated yesterday's rally in London trade after a slight drop Thursday morning, rising back above $1594 and $29.30 per ounce respectively as platinum and palladium also stemmed this week's sharp drops.
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By Mark O'Byrne |
May 1, 2012
Gold rose $3.80 or 0.23% in New York yesterday and closed at $1,666.10/oz. However, there were more peculiar goings on in the gold market which saw one massive sell order knock prices lower, prior to gold gathering itself and moving higher.
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By Jeffrey Nichols |
April 26, 2012
Central banks are now creating an upside bias to the market and are reducing the “free-float” available to meet future demand, even at much higher prices. As a consequence, we can expect less downside volatility – and a more sustainable bull market.
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By Eric McWhinnie |
April 24, 2012
Volatility is likely to remain this year as speculation builds on even more central bank easing. However, gold’s ability to stem losses on the downside and trade separately from equities makes it a very attractive holding for any portfolio.
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By Adrian Ash |
April 24, 2012
Exploding the money supply can't be guaranteed to destroy the value of cash, as Japan's experience over the last decade shows. But crushing the purchasing power of people's income and savings is a more certain power for central bankers to summon up than anything else.
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By Richard (Rick) Mills |
April 23, 2012
For the very first time in our history all money, all currencies, are now fiat. The US dollar used to be gold backed and it was the rock to which all of the world's currencies were anchored. Our 41-year experiment with paper money is almost over.
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By Adrian Ash |
April 19, 2012
Compulsive hoarding is an affliction, an illness. It disables the sufferer and those around them, presenting a health hazard as stuff piles up and the home turns into a trash can. But just because you hoard money or gold bullion, doesn't mean you're sick or wrong.